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Archive for September 2006

After hearing a lot of good things about Murderous Maths, I ordered a copy from Amazon UK (not available in the US for some reason). It arrived yesterday, and Henry and I read several chapters this morning. It’s just as good as all the reviewers say it is! Stories and neat facts about math, told with humor, are much more fun for Henry than boring old worksheets. (Which do have their place, but having some fun with Math is great!) Highly recommended!!!

I’ve been reading The Book of Three, by Lloyd Alexander, to Henry for his bedtime story. We’re about halfway through. Honestly, I expected more, for such a famous, award-winning book. It’s not bad, but it feels flat. The characters are bland, the situations predictable, the dialogue unrealistic. I tried to read it as a child (my sister loved it) but I couldn’t muster up enough interest top get past the first chapter. Henry LOVES it, so I suppose it could it also be a problem that I’m just generally not a fan of fantasy-fiction, or whatever it it. Although I adore the The Dark is Rising series, which I’ve told Henry we’ll read next.

Last night Dan took a look at my corrupted savegame situation. He noticed that the OTHER save slot (where I saved once accidentally, on the 2nd day of Spring) would load successfully. After some tinkering, he figured out how to make my bad savegame load again, by starting the 2nd savegame and then loading the first one from there! It was a miracle, I tell you! He had to have my little guy walk a certain distance before trying to load the other save or it didn’t work.

I was going to play Harvest Moon DS today while Henry was in his Theater class, but my savegame wouldn’t load. SIGH. I guess I’ll have to start my farm all over again. It’s not that bad to have to start over, I was only at the end of the first summer, but now I’m wondering if I’ll lose my next savegame at some random time. Bah.

I feel nervous and jumpy today, for no reason. Very annoying. I’m cooking dinner right now, just taking a little break while the pasta sauce cooks (one red bell pepper, diced, some chopped green onions, two crumbled-up hamburger patties, half a jar of marinara sauce). I’ll serve that over 4-color vegetable radiatore (a.k.a Brain Pasta) with chard sauted with garlic and chicken broth. I may be nervous and jumpy but I can still cook a nice dinner.

Last night I finished Everything She Thought She Wanted, by Elizabeth Buchan. I loved it. I thought it was just as good as The Good Wife Strikes Back but not quite as good as Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman.

=The Memory of all That= by Betsy Blair. She was Gene Kelly’s first wife, a dancer, an actress, an interesting person, and a good writer. Really enjoyed this book. She was blacklisted in the 50s, and her memoir makes me want to read more about McCarthyism. (March 2004)

=Traveling Shoes= by Noel Streatfeild. I’ve loved her books ever since I read =Thursday’s Child= long long ago. This was a new one for me and I enjoyed it immensely! (Jan 2004)

=Drinking the Rain= by Alix Kates Shulman. This was a good one! (Jan 2004)

=Good Faith= by Jane Smiley. Eh. I like her style, I like her characters… but the book was relatively dull. You can see that the guy is going to get swindled… and then 700 pages later he gets swindled, the end. (Jan 2004)

=Beautiful Bodies= by Laura Shaine Cunningham — GREAT book! I liked it a lot more than =Dreams of Rescue= and now I want to find even more of her novels. (Jan 2004)

=The Lost Continent= by Bill Bryson. Very funny in places, quite interesting, if you can put up with the endless griping. (Dec. 2003)

=Notes from a Small Island= by Bill Bryson. Alternately amusing and irritating. I had an audiobook, and it got to the point where I’d say, “I’m going to go listen to a man complain about England now…”

=I Want That!= by Thomas Hine. A cultural history of shopping. Interesting!

=Don’t Let’s Go To The Dogs Tonight= by Alexandra Fuller. A memoir by a woman who is exactly my age, about her childhood in Africa. It kept me up way too late every night until I was done. Thanks, Wastrel :)

=A Year at the Movies= by Kevin Murphy (“Tom Servo” of MST3K). So funny. He went to the movies every day for an entire year, and writes about the movies, the theatres, the food, the audiences, and random other things.

=The Sticklepath Strangler= by Michael Jecks. A murder mystery set in medieval England. Not nearly as bad as it sounds — actually quite readable :)

=Welcome to Higby= by Mark Dunn. Wonderful book. Reminded me just a little of Clyde Edgerton and Bailey White.

=Step-Ball-Change= by Jeanne Ray. Oh wow. This has got to be one of the best books I’ve read in a long long time. I couldn’t put it down, read it cover to cover in two days.

=Carry On, Jeeves= by P.G. Wodehouse. Short stories!!

=Money For Nothing= by P.G. Wodehouse. Lol :)

=Cause Celeb= by Helen Fielding. Quite different from Bridget Jones; very very good!

=Backpack= by Emily Barr

=The Natural History of the Rich: A Field Guide= by Richard Conniff. Marvelous!

=The Nanny Diaries= by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus.

=A Shilling for Candles= by Josephine Tey.

=My Family and Other Animals= by Gerald Durrell. Of all the Durrell books I’ve read, this one is turning out to be a big favorite. His short stories always gave a tantalizing glimpse of his family, but never quite enough!

=To Love And Be Wise= by Josephine Tey (I’ve been a Tey fan ever since my sister Kathy suggested I read =The Daughter of Time= when I was a kid. Somehow I never read this one before! What a treat :)

=The Professor and the Madman= by Simon Winchester — the story of the Oxford English Dictionary. Fascinating subject, but the book is somewhat awkwardly written. Well worth reading if you are interested in linguistics.

=first test= by tamora pierce — i’m excited about this one. it’s the first in a series of four (the “protector of the small” series), and the author has written at least 8 other books about the same world :)

=page= by tamora pierce (2nd in the “protector of the small” series)

=advanced cinematherapy: the girl’s guide to finding happiness one movie at a time= by peske and west (lots of fun, and now i have a whole list of movies i want to rent :)

the “All Creatures” books by James Herriot. I read them for the first time when I was about 8, and have re-read them all countless times. I just worked through them again. I’m always a little bit sad when I get to the end of the last book. I wish there were more.

many of Dick Francis’s thrillers — especially some of his older stuff such as =Reflex=, =In The Frame=, and =Twice Shy=.

Harvest Moon for DS was released on the 15th. Dan had pre-ordered it and, the day it came out, brought home a copy for me for a late birthday present! I’ve been playing it a lot over the last few days and I can safely say that it’s an excellent game. Gone is the annoying 5-item rucksack limit! You start now with a rucksack that’ll hold 15 items, and like items will STACK (up to 99 per stack)! You can carry all your tools with you at all times. You can wander about and pick up 16 bamboo shoots, a handful of red grasses, some Pink Cat flowers, and a stack of chopped lumber, without running home constantly!

The graphics are Friends of Mineral Town style, with nicely-updated large portraits. The touch screen is used to great advantage — you can be looking at a map (zoomed in or distant) while you’re running around town. You’ll never get lost (I get lost a lot). You can select or stack items (or split stacks with rapid taps! Thanks, Dan :) in your rucksack with the stylus. Eventually, animal care can be performed on the touch-screen but I have no animals yet so I can’t comment on that aspect.

Your bookcase at home now holds many helpful books — the business hours of all the stores, for instance, and the growth cycles of all the possible crops. Most purchases are made over the telephone in your house (you’re ordering from the stores in Mineral Town).

It’s a tremendously fun game. The only thing I really wish for is a notification of the selling price of the items you drop in your collection box (c.f. Magical Melody).

Man, I still feel worn out from Henry’s party. I think next year we’ll limit the guest list to 5 kids and skip the pinata. I hate pinatas. Didn’t sleep well last night from leftover party anxiety. Henry’s edgy and worn out, too. He’s interesting. He enjoys groups but is noticably drained and frazzled by too much socializing. He’s more extroverted than me — copes with groups better for sure — but still quite an introvert in some ways. He’s definitely happiest spending time with one friend at a time, and even then needs considerable alone time to recharge after the friend goes home.

Today was Henry’s Birthday Party. It was very nice — 10 fun and friendly children (including Henry), swimming, general playing, pizza, cherry pie, ice cream, a pinata. I think everyone had a really nice time. It only lasted from 3 to 6 but wiped me out completely. I’m a typical introvert — it makes me feel exhausted and rather ill to be in a crowd of people for any length of time, no matter how pleasant they are. Henry’s dad took Henry and Fargo back to his house to spend the night so now I’ve got some quiet again. Maybe I’ll feel better tomorrow.

The new iPod nanos are cute! Colorful aluminum is much better than black or white plastic. I might be tempted by the 4-gig green model if I didn’t already have a perfectly good green 6-gig mini, heheh :) I don’t need a color screen badly enough to spend $200 and lose 2 gigs. I love my mini, anyway, and it’s only 13 months old and works perfectly. Seems like apple would be wiser to wait a little longer between new product releases.

Busy and fun day. Henry and I went out to do errands, including returning a book to the library. While we were there he asked a very nice children’s librarian for recommendations. He told her his favorite books and she led him around and helped him pick out a good stack of the dark fantasy books he loves so much. He’s a reading machine lately. He started on A Wind in the Door right away in the car (lucky guy can read in the car without getting sick).

In the afternoon I helped him record more Pirate’s Chorus parts for librivox’s Pirates of Penzance production. I tried again to record Ruth but my voice is just not good enough. Sigh. So I gave up on that and passed the part along to someone else. Before my students came we baked a cake, too. Then I taught, then took him to karate and watched the class for a change, then came home and made dinner, which was brown rice, stir-fried veggies, and Trader Joe’s Hawaiian Beef, yummy! Plus cake for after of course :)

Dan and I started watching Survivor Thailand last night so tonight we get to watch the second episode. It’s wonderfully soothing bedtime television.